Keller and Jo Morandin
Laura Ponti-Sgargi
Laura “Baung Lassie” Taylor
Leslie the Old, Peter the Cheater, and Duff the Dog
Linda and Robert Smith
Louis Theberge
Mana Vermeulen
Marianne “No Bacon” Beacon
Mark Piepkorn
Marthe & Albert Attema
Martin Liefhebber
Master Fut Yu
Michael Greenhough and co.
Mike Henry
Orville Thertell
Ontario Straw Bale Building Coalition
Patrick Marcotte & Sherri Smith
Patty Apac
Paul Longhurst
Paul Patterson & Tim Whalen
Regis Cornale
Rene Dalmeijer
Ricardo and Chris Sternberg
Ron & Donna Hunter
Ross and Patti Kembar
Russell Scott and everybody at the
Ecology Retreat Centre
Sandy Z
Scott Pegg
Sean Flanagan & Maureen Corrigan
Sean ‘mind the splash’ Bonham
Simon and JP at Generation Solar
Skye Faris
Sparo at Arro
Spatch Noseworthy
Squirtin’ Burt Sturton
Stephen, Laurie & Malaika Collette
The Grumpy
The Putz Frau thanks the Putzmeister
The Spotted Dog (Rob & Scott)
The Straw Wolf, may he snarl forever
TOLA
Tom Rijven
Uncle Paul and Uncle Paul’s Vic Lemmon
Shelly the dog, Gus the dog and all the other
great job site dogs
All our workshop “graduates”
Other contributors we may have forgotten Lego blocks, Meccano sets, and for their inspiring, pioneering work in straw bale construction, David Eisenberg, Athena and Bill Steen, David Bainbridge, Matts Myhrman and Judy Knox, Steve MacDonald, and Bruce King.
Introduction
What to Expect from This Book
The idea of straw bale building has certainly hit a nerve in our collective thinking. An almost forgotten building style that was only ever used briefly in a small prairie region of North America has, in the past 25 years, spread to become practiced almost everywhere. Tens of thousands of people worldwide have chosen this system to build their homes, often in the face of resistance from local authorities and to the raised eyebrows of family, friends, and neighbors.
Straw bale building is certainly not the first alternative building style to be introduced and popularized, but its continuing growth and movement toward mainstream acceptance are unique among such alternatives. When we first started building with bales (nearly ten years ago!), it was a rare person indeed who knew what the heck we were talking about; today it is a rare person who hasn’t at least heard of the idea; many have seen it presented on television or in print or know somebody who has worked on one.
Why this explosive growth? In part, it might be attributed to the media-friendly nature of the material — every journalist loves a Three Little Pigs headline! Almost every major newspaper and television network has by now covered straw bale building. But once the media novelty wears off, many people remain intrigued and fascinated with straw bale construction. Impressed by the high energy efficiency, the lowered environmental impact, and the beautiful simplicity of building with straw bales, many people have been willing to commit their time, effort, and money to building this way.
Straw bale building now finds itself at an important crossroads. Unlike other“new”building systems, this one does not come from within the construction industry. The incredible growth in straw bale building has been fueled entirely by a grassroots desire to build more efficiently and effectively. This means there has been no central planning or designing, no industry-wide testing or standardization. And that has been a good thing. The vast amount of experimentation that has occurred provides us with numerous examples of methods that work and methods that do not work. This grassroots movement also requires that we continually learn from one another, so that important lessons are shared and the collective experience becomes collective knowledge.
Most corners of the world have seen a surge of interest in straw bale building, including
a. Alaska,
b. Australia,
c. Belarus,
d. Belgium,
e. Chile,
f. China,
g. Germany ,
h. Iraq ,
i. Israel,
j. Norway ,
k. Saudia Arabia ,
l. South Africa and (m) the UK.
Luckily for all bale building enthusiasts, bale builders are largely an open, honest, and communicative bunch. Through formal and informal exchanges, much information trading takes place locally and internationally. The lack of standards has allowed creative thinkers to flourish and many styles of bale building to emerge.
We see our efforts in updating this book as our contribution to this growing body of knowledge. It has been exciting, since the publication of Straw Bale Building, to be the recipients of news, inquiries, updates, and conversations about bale building projects from all parts of the world, and nothing would please us more than to find this revised edition playing the same role as inspiration and conversation starter. We believe that experimentation and creative thinking are essential in the growth of straw bale building, and hope to encourage such thinking in these pages. But we also believe that the style has progressed to the point where there are some basic standards that apply to all bale buildings. In this book, we are attempting to help readers find creative solutions to their own building needs while staying mindful of these basic dos and don’ts of bale building.
We hope you find that balance for yourself in these pages!
This is a Book of Options and Thinking Tools
There is no such thing as“the straw bale standard.” Instead of prescribing one particular methodology, we have set out to define the questions you will face during the exciting process of planning and building. It is incredibly complex, with so many competing considerations that sometimes a project can seem overwhelming. There are numerous critical moments of debate in every building project. In this book, we attempt to outline a variety of potential solutions and then give an honest appraisal of each choice according to five criteria:
• cost
• energy efficiency
• environmental implications